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{{pp-semi-indef}}{{pp-move-indef}}{{Use dmy dates|date=June 2012}}{{WAP assignment | course = Wikipedia:Canada Education Program/Courses/Introduction to Psychology, Part I (Steve Joordens) | university = University of Toronto Scarborough | term = 2011 Q3 | project = WikiProject Wikipedia }}{{Nazism sidebar}}Nazi human experimentation was a series of medical experiments on large numbers of prisoners, including children, by Nazi Germany in its concentration camps in the early to mid 1940s, during World War II and the Holocaust. Chief target populations included Romani, Sinti, ethnic Poles, Soviet POWs, disabled Germans, and Jews from across Europe.Nazi physicians and their assistants forced prisoners into participating; they did not willingly volunteer and no consent was given for the procedures. Typically, the experiments resulted in death, trauma, disfigurement or permanent disability, and as such are considered examples of medical torture.At Auschwitz and other camps, under the direction of Eduard Wirths, selected inmates were subjected to various hazardous experiments that were designed to help German military personnel in combat situations, develop new weapons, aid in the recovery of military personnel who had been injured, and to advance the Nazi racial ideology.WEB,weblink Nazi Medical Experimentation, 23 March 2008, US Holocaust Memorial Museum, Aribert Heim conducted similar medical experiments at Mauthausen.After the war, these crimes were tried at what became known as the Doctors' Trial, and revulsion at the abuses perpetrated led to the development of the Nuremberg Code of medical ethics. The Nazi physicians in the Doctors' Trial argued that military necessity justified their torturous experiments, and compared their victims to collateral damage from Allied bombings. But this defense, which was in any case rejected by the Tribunal, cannot apply to the twin experiments of Josef Mengele, which were performed on children and had no connection to military necessity.

Experiments

The table of contents of a document from the Nuremberg military tribunals prosecution includes titles of the sections that document medical experiments revolving around: food, seawater, epidemic jaundice, sulfanilamide, blood coagulation and phlegmone."Nuremberg - Document Viewer - Table of contents for prosecution document book 8, concerning medical experiments". nuremberg.law.harvard.edu. Retrieved 2017-04-14. According to the indictments at the Subsequent Nuremberg Trials,WEB, Medical Experiment, Jewish Virtual Library,weblink 23 March 2008, WEB, The Doctors Trial: The Medical Case of the Subsequent Nuremberg Proceedings, United States Holocaust Memorial Museum,weblink 23 March 2008, yes,weblink" title="web.archive.org/web/20080420105201weblink">weblink 20 April 2008, dmy-all, these experiments included the following:

Experiments on twins

Experiments on twin children in concentration camps were created to show the similarities and differences in the genetics of twins, as well as to see if the human body can be unnaturally manipulated. The central leader of the experiments was Josef Mengele, who from 1943 to 1944 performed experiments on nearly 1,500 sets of imprisoned twins at Auschwitz. About 200 people survived these studies.Josef Mengele and Experimentation on Human Twins at Auschwitz {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150414074936weblink |date=14 April 2015 }}, Children of the Flames; Dr. Josef Mengele and the Untold Story of the Twins of Auschwitz, Lucette Matalon Lagnado and Sheila Cohn Dekel, and Mengele: the Complete Story by Gerald Posner and John Ware. The twins were arranged by age and sex and kept in barracks between experiments, which ranged from injection of different dyes into the eyes of twins to see whether it would change their color to sewing twins together in attempts to create conjoined twins.BOOK, Black, Edwin, War Against the Weak: Eugenics and America's Campaign to Create a Master Race,weblink 14 April 2008, 2004, Thunder's Mouth Press, United States, 1-56858-258-7, BOOK, Berenbaum, Michael, The world must know: the history of the Holocaust as told in the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum, Little, Brown, Boston, 1993, 194â5, 0-316-09134-0, Often times, one twin would be forced to undergo experimentation, while the other was kept as a control. If the experimentation reached the point of death, the second twin would be brought in to be killed at the same time. Doctors would then look at the effects of experimentation and compare both bodies.Baron, Saskia, director. Science and the Swastika: The Deadly Experiment. Darlow Smithson Productions, 2001.

Bone, muscle, and nerve transplantation experiments

From about September 1942 to about December 1943 experiments were conducted at the RavensbrÃ¼ck concentration camp, for the benefit of the German Armed Forces, to study bone, muscle, and nerveregeneration, and bone transplantation from one person to another.BOOK,weblink When Doctors Kill: Who, Why, and How, Perper, Joshua A., Cina, Stephen J., 2010-06-14, Springer Science & Business Media, 9781441913692, en, Sections of bones, muscles, and nerves were removed from the subjects without use of anesthesia. As a result of these operations, many victims suffered intense agony, mutilation, and permanent disability.On August 12, 1946 a survivor named Jadwiga KamiÅskaWEB,weblink Women's Concentration Camp Medical Experiment Victims, November 12, 2017, gave a deposition about her time at RavensbrÃ¼ck concentration camp and describes how she was operated on twice. Both operations involved one of her legs and although she never describes having any knowledge as to what exactly the procedure was, she explains that both times she was in extreme pain and developed a fever post surgery. Yet she was given little to no care. KamiÅska describes being told that she had been operated on simply because she was a "young girl and a Polish patriot". She describes how her leg oozed pus for months after the operations."Nuremberg - Document Viewer - Deposition concerning medical experiments at Ravensbrueck [bone/muscle/nerve experiments"]. nuremberg.law.harvard.edu. Retrieved 2017-04-14.Prisoners were also experimented on by having their bone marrow injected with bacteria to study the effectiveness of new drugs being developed for use in the battle fields. Many prisoners left the camps with disfigurement that would last the rest of their lives.WEB,weblink Nazi Medical Experiments, www.ushmm.org, en, 2018-05-03,

Freezing experiments

File:Dachau cold water immersion.jpg|right|thumb|A cold water immersion experiment at Dachau concentration camp presided over by Ernst HolzlÃ¶hner (left) and Sigmund Rascher (right). The subject is wearing an experimental LuftwaffeLuftwaffeIn 1941, the Luftwaffe conducted experiments with the intent of discovering means to prevent and treat hypothermia. There were 360 to 400 experiments and 280 to 300 victims indicating some victims suffered more than one experiment.{|class="wikitable"

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Another study placed prisoners naked in the open air for several hours with temperatures as low as â6 Â°C (21 Â°F). Besides studying the physical effects of cold exposure, the experimenters also assessed different methods of rewarming survivors.Bogod, David. "The Nazi Hypothermia Experiments: Forbidden Data?", Anaesthesia, Volume 59 Issue 12 Page 1155, December 2004. "One assistant later testified that some victims were thrown into boiling water for rewarming."JOURNAL

first1 = Robert L., Beginning in August 1942, at the Dachau camp, prisoners were forced to sit in tanks of freezing water for up to 3 hours. After subjects were frozen, they then underwent different methods for rewarming. Many subjects died in this process.WEB,weblink Freezing Experiments, www.jewishvirtuallibrary.org, en, 2018-05-03, The freezing/hypothermia experiments were conducted for the Nazi high command to simulate the conditions the armies suffered on the Eastern Front, as the German forces were ill-prepared for the cold weather they encountered. Many experiments were conducted on captured Russian troops; the Nazis wondered whether their genetics gave them superior resistance to cold. The principal locales were Dachau and Auschwitz. Sigmund Rascher, an SS doctor based at Dachau, reported directly to ReichsfÃ¼hrer-SSHeinrich Himmler and publicised the results of his freezing experiments at the 1942 medical conference entitled "Medical Problems Arising from Sea and Winter".WEB, Tyson, Peter, Holocaust on Trial: The Experiments, NOVA Online,weblink 23 March 2008, In a letter from September 10, 1942, Rascher describes an experiment on intense cooling performed in Dachau where people were dressed in fighter pilot uniforms and submerged in freezing water. Rascher had some of the victims completely underwater and others only submerged up to the head."Documents Regarding Nazi Medical Experiments". www.jewishvirtuallibrary.org. Retrieved 2017-04-14. Approximately 100 people are reported to have died as a result of these experiments.Neurnberg Military Tribunal, Volume I Â· Page 200

Malaria experiments

From about February 1942 to about April 1945, experiments were conducted at the Dachau concentration camp in order to investigate immunization for treatment of malaria. Healthy inmates were infected by mosquitoes or by injections of extracts of the mucous glands of female mosquitoes. After contracting the disease, the subjects were treated with various drugs to test their relative efficiency.BOOK, George J. Annas Edward R. Utley Professor of Health Law, Medicine Michael A. Grodin Associate Professor of Philosophy and Associate Director of Law, and Ethics Program both of the Boston University Schools of Medicine and Public Health, The Nazi Doctors and the Nuremberg Code : Human Rights in Human Experimentation: Human Rights in Human Experimentation,weblink 7 May 1992, Oxford University Press, USA, 978-0-19-977226-1, 98â, Over 1,200 people were used in these experiments and more than half died as a result.BOOK, United States. Office of Chief of Counsel for the Prosecution of Axis Criminality, United States. Dept. of State, United States. War Dept, International Military Tribunal, Nazi conspiracy and aggression: Office of United States Chief of Counsel for Prosecution of Axis Criminality,weblink 1946, U.S. Govt. Print. Off., Other test subjects were left with permanent disabilities.WEB,weblink Malaria Experiments, www.jewishvirtuallibrary.org, en, 2018-05-03,

Epidemic jaundice

From June 1943 till January 1945 at the concentration camps, Sachsenhausen and Natzweiler, experimentation with epidemic jaundice was conducted. The test subjects were injected with the disease in order to discover new inoculations for the condition. These tests were conducted for the benefit of the German Armed Forces. Many suffered great pain in these experiments.WEB,weblink Epidemic Jaundice Experiments, www.jewishvirtuallibrary.org, en, 2018-05-03,

Mustard gas experiments

At various times between September 1939 and April 1945, many experiments were conducted at Sachsenhausen, Natzweiler, and other camps to investigate the most effective treatment of wounds caused by mustard gas. Test subjects were deliberately exposed to mustard gas and other vesicants (e.g. Lewisite) which inflicted severe chemical burns. The victims' wounds were then tested to find the most effective treatment for the mustard gas burns.WEB, Introduction to NMT Case 1: U.S.A. v. Karl Brandt et al., Harvard Law Library, Nuremberg Trials Project: A Digital Document Collection,weblink 23 March 2008, File:Children of Bullinhuser Damm.jpg|thumb|Child victims of Nazi experimentation show incisions where axillary lymph nodes had been surgically removed after they were deliberately infected with tuberculosis at Neuengamme concentration campNeuengamme concentration camp

Sulfonamide experiments

From about July 1942 to about September 1943, experiments to investigate the effectiveness of sulfonamide, a synthetic antimicrobial agent, were conducted at RavensbrÃ¼ck.Schaefer, Naomi. The Legacy of Nazi Medicine, The New Atlantis, Number 5, Spring 2004, pp. 54â60. Wounds inflicted on the subjects were infected with bacteria such as Streptococcus, Clostridium perfringens (a major causative agent in gas gangrene) and Clostridium tetani, the causative agent in tetanus.BOOK, Spitz, Vivien, Doctors from Hell: The Horrific Account of Nazi Experiments on Humans,weblink 2005, Sentient Publications, 1-59181-032-9, Circulation of blood was interrupted by tying off blood vessels at both ends of the wound to create a condition similar to that of a battlefield wound. Infection was aggravated by forcing wood shavings and ground glass into the wounds. The infection was treated with sulfonamide and other drugs to determine their effectiveness.

Sea water experiments

From about July 1944 to about September 1944, experiments were conducted at the Dachau concentration camp to study various methods of making sea water drinkable. These victims were subject to deprivation of all food and only given the filtered sea water.WEB,weblink Sea Water Experiments, www.jewishvirtuallibrary.org, en, 2018-05-03, At one point, a group of roughly 90 Roma were deprived of food and given nothing but sea water to drink by Dr. Hans Eppinger, leaving them gravely injured. They were so dehydrated that others observed them licking freshly mopped floors in an attempt to get drinkable water.WEB, Cohen, Baruch C., The Ethics Of Using Medical Data From Nazi Experiments, Jewish Law: Articles,weblink 23 March 2008, A Holocaust survivor named Joseph Tschofenig wrote a statement on these seawater experiments at Dachau. Tschofenig explained how while working at the medical experimentation stations he gained insight into some of the experiments that were performed on prisoners, namely those where they were forced to drink salt water. Tschofenig also described how victims of the experiments had trouble eating and would desperately seek out any source of water including old floor rags. Tschofenig was responsible for using the X-ray machine in the infirmary and describes how even though he had insight into what was going on he was powerless to stop it. He gives the example of a patient in the infirmary who was sent to the gas chambers by Dr. Sigmund Rascher simply because he witnessed one of the low-pressure experiments."Nuremberg - Document Viewer - Affidavit concerning the seawater experiments". nuremberg.law.harvard.edu. Retrieved 2017-04-14.

Sterilization and fertility experiments

The Law for the Prevention of Genetically Defective Progeny was passed on 14 July 1933, which legalized the involuntary sterilization of persons with diseases claimed to be hereditary: weak-mindedness, schizophrenia, alcohol abuse, insanity, blindness, deafness, and physical deformities. The law was used to encourage growth of the Aryan race through the sterilization of persons who fell under the quota of being genetically defective.Gardella JE. The cost-effectiveness of killing: an overview of Nazi "euthanasia." Medical Sentinel 1999;4:132-5 1% of citizens between the age of 17 to 24 had been sterilized within 2 years of the law passing.Within 4 years, 300,000 patients had been sterilized.Dahl M. [Selection and destruction-treatment of "unworthy-to-live" children in the Third Reich and the role of child and adolescent psychiatry], Prax Kinderpsychol Kinderpsychiatr 2001;50:170-91. From about March 1941 to about January 1945, sterilization experiments were conducted at Auschwitz, RavensbrÃ¼ck, and other places by Dr. Carl Clauberg. The purpose of these experiments was to develop a method of sterilization which would be suitable for sterilizing millions of people with a minimum of time and effort. The targets for sterilization included Jewish and Roma populations. These experiments were conducted by means of X-ray, surgery and various drugs. Thousands of victims were sterilized. Aside from its experimentation, the Nazi government sterilized around 400,000 people as part of its compulsory sterilization program.WEB, Piotrowski, Christa, Dark Chapter of American History: U.S. Court Battle Over Forced Sterilization, 21 July 2000, CommonDreams.org News Center,weblink 23 March 2008, yes,weblink" title="web.archive.org/web/20080415181618weblink">weblink 15 April 2008, dmy-all, One survivor, who underwent experimentation at Auschwitz, said that the experimentation she endured caused, "fainting from severe pain for a year and a half." Years later she went to a doctor and discovered that her uterus had become one comparable to that of a 4-year-old.NEWS,weblink Personal Statements From Victims of Nazi Medical Experiments - Claims Conference, Conference, Claims, Claims Conference, 2018-05-03, en-US, Intravenous injections of solutions speculated to contain iodine and silver nitrate were successful, but had unwanted side effects such as vaginal bleeding, severe abdominal pain, and cervical cancer.NEWS, Meric, Vesna, Forced to take part in experiments, 27 January 2005, BBC News,weblink Therefore, radiation treatment became the favored choice of sterilization. Specific amounts of exposure to radiation destroyed a person's ability to produce ova or sperm, sometimes administered through deception. Many suffered severe radiation burns.WEB, Medical Experiments at Auschwitz, Jewish Virtual Library,weblink 23 March 2008, M.D. William E. Seidelman, a professor from the University of Toronto, in collaboration with Dr. Howard Israel of Columbia University published a report on an investigation on the Medical experimentation performed in Austria under the Nazi Regime. In that report he mentions a Doctor Hermann Stieve, who used the war to experiment on live humans. Dr. Stieve specifically focused on the reproductive system of women. He would tell women their execution date in advance, and he would evaluate how their psychological distress would affect their menstruation cycles. After they were murdered, he would dissect and examine their reproductive organs. Some of the women were even raped after they were told the date when they would be killed, so that Dr. Stieve could study the path of sperm through their reproductive system."Medicine and Murder in the Third Reich". www.jewishvirtuallibrary.org. Retrieved 2017-04-14.

Experiments with poison

Somewhere between December 1943 and October 1944, experiments were conducted at Buchenwald to investigate the effect of various poisons. The poisons were secretly administered to experimental subjects in their food. The victims died as a result of the poison or were killed immediately in order to permit autopsies. In September 1944, experimental subjects were shot with poisonous bullets, suffered torture and often died.

Incendiary bomb experiments

From around November 1943 to around January 1944, experiments were conducted at Buchenwald to test the effect of various pharmaceutical preparations on phosphorus burns. These burns were inflicted on prisoners using phosphorus material extracted from incendiary bombs.

High altitude experiments

{{further|Hubertus Strughold}}In early 1942, prisoners at Dachau concentration camp were used by Sigmund Rascher in experiments to aid German pilots who had to eject at high altitudes. A low-pressure chamber containing these prisoners was used to simulate conditions at altitudes of up to 20,000 m (66,000 ft). It was rumored that Rascher performed vivisections on the brains of victims who survived the initial experiment.BOOK, Cockburn, Alexander, Whiteout:The CIA, Drugs, and the Press,weblink 1998, Verso, 1-85984-139-2, Of the 200 subjects, 80 died outright, and the others were executed. In a letter from April 5, 1942 between Dr. Sigmund Rascher and Heinrich Himmler, Rascher explains the results of a low-pressure experiment that was performed on people at Dachau Concentration camp in which the victim was suffocated while Rascher and another unnamed doctor took note of his reactions. The person was described as 37 years old and in good health before being murdered. Rascher described the victim's actions as he began to lose oxygen and timed the changes in behavior. The 37-year-old began to wiggle his head at 4 minutes, a minute later Rascher observed that he was suffering from cramps before falling unconscious. He describes how the victim then lay unconscious, breathing only 3 times per minute, until he stopped breathing 30 minutes after being deprived of oxygen. The victim then turned blue and began foaming at the mouth. An autopsy followed an hour later."Documents Regarding Nazi Medical Experiments". www.jewishvirtuallibrary.org. Retrieved 2017-04-14In a letter from Heinrich Himmler to Dr. Sigmund Rascher on April 13, 1942, Himmler ordered Rascher to continue the high altitude experiments and to continue experimenting on prisoners condemned to death and to "determine whether these men could be recalled to life". If a victim could be successfully resuscitated, Himmler ordered that he be pardoned to "concentration camp for life"."Nuremberg - Document Viewer - Letter to Sigmund Rascher concerning the high altitude experiments". nuremberg.law.harvard.edu. Retrieved 2017-04-14.

Blood coagulation experiments

Sigmund Rascher experimented with the effects of Polygal, a substance made from beet and apple pectin, which aided blood clotting. He predicted that the preventive use of Polygal tablets would reduce bleeding from gunshot wounds sustained during combat or during surgery. Subjects were given a Polygal tablet, and shot through the neck or chest, or their limbs amputated without anaesthesia. Rascher published an article on his experience of using Polygal, without detailing the nature of the human trials and also set up a company to manufacture the substance, staffed by prisoners.Michalczyk, p. 96

Aftermath

Other documented transcriptions from Heinrich Himmler include phrases such as "These researchesâ¦ can be performed by us with particular efficiency because I personally assumed the responsibility for supplying asocial individuals and criminals who deserve only to die from concentration camps for these experiments.""Nuremberg - Document Viewer - Letter to Erhard Milch concerning the high altitude and freezing experiments". nuremberg.law.harvard.edu. Retrieved 2017-04-14. Many of the subjects died as a result of the experiments conducted by the Nazis, while many others were executed after the tests were completed to study the effects post mortem.WEB, Rosenberg, Jennifer, Mengele's Children â The Twins of Auschwitz, about.com,weblink 23 March 2008, Those who survived were often left mutilated, suffering permanent disability, weakened bodies, and mental distress.WEB, Sterilization Experiments, Jewish Virtual Library,weblink 23 March 2008, On 19 August 1947, the doctors captured by Allied forces were put on trial in USA vs. Karl Brandt et al., commonly known as the Doctors' Trial. At the trial, several of the doctors argued in their defense that there was no international law regarding medical experimentation.{{citation needed|date=March 2016}} Some doctors also claimed that they had been doing the world a favor. An SS doctor was quoted saying that "Jews were the festering appendix in the body of Europe." He then went on to argue he was doing the world a favor by eliminating them.The issue of informed consent had previously been controversial in German medicine in 1900, when Dr. Albert Neisser infected patients (mainly prostitutes) with syphilis without their consent. Despite Neisser's support from most of the academic community, public opinion, led by psychiatrist Albert Moll, was against Neisser. While Neisser went on to be fined by the Royal Disciplinary Court, Moll developed "a legally based, positivistic contract theory of the patient-doctor relationship" that was not adopted into German law.WEB,weblink Informed consent in human experimentation before the Nuremberg code, Vollman, Jochen, Rolf Winau, BMJ, 8 April 2008,weblink" title="web.archive.org/web/20080304153538weblink">weblink 4 March 2008, Eventually, the minister for religious, educational, and medical affairs issued a directive stating that medical interventions other than for diagnosis, healing, and immunization were excluded under all circumstances if "the human subject was a minor or not competent for other reasons", or if the subject had not given his or her "unambiguous consent" after a "proper explanation of the possible negative consequences" of the intervention, though this was not legally binding.In response, Drs. Leo Alexander and Andrew Conway Ivy, the American Medical Association representative at the Doctors' Trial, drafted a ten-point memorandum entitled Permissible Medical Experiment that went on to be known as the Nuremberg Code.WEB, The Nuremberg Code, United States Holocaust Memorial Museum,weblink 23 March 2008, yes,weblink" title="web.archive.org/web/20080221005231weblink">weblink 21 February 2008, dmy-all, The code calls for such standards as voluntary consent of patients, avoidance of unnecessary pain and suffering, and that there must be a belief that the experimentation will not end in death or disability.WEB, Regulations and Ethical Guidelines: Reprinted from ''Trials of War Criminals before the Nuremberg Military Tribunals under Control Council Law No. 10, Vol. 2, pp. 181â182, Washington, D.C.: U.S. Government Printing Office, 1949, Office of Human Subjects Research,weblink 23 March 2008, yes,weblink" title="web.archive.org/web/20071029120713weblink">weblink 29 October 2007, The Code was not cited in any of the findings against the defendants and never made it into either German or American medical law.JOURNAL, Ghooi, Ravindra B., 2011-01-01, The Nuremberg CodeâA critique, Perspectives in Clinical Research, 2, 2, 72â76, 10.4103/2229-3485.80371, 2229-3485, 3121268, 21731859, This code comes from the Nuremberg Trials where the most heinous of Nazi leaders were put on trial for their war crimes.WEB,weblink The Nuremberg Trials, www.ushmm.org, en, 2018-05-03, To this day, the Nuremberg Code remains a major stepping stone for medical experimentation.WEB,weblink Nuremberg Code â United States Holocaust Memorial Museum, www.ushmm.org, en, 2018-05-03,

Modern ethical issues

Andrew Conway Ivy stated the Nazi experiments were of no medical value. Data obtained from the experiments, however, has been used and considered for use in multiple fields, often causing controversy. Some object to the data's purely use on ethical grounds, disagreeing with the methods used to obtain it, while others have rejected the research only on scientific grounds, criticizing methodological inconsistencies. Those in favor of using the data argue that if it has practical value to save lives, it would be equally unethical not to use it. Arnold S. Relman, editor of The New England Journal of Medicine from 1977 till 1991, refused to allow the journal to publish any article that cited the Nazi experiments.The results of the Dachau freezing experiments have been used in some late 20th century research into the treatment of hypothermia; at least 45 publications had referenced the experiments as of 1984, though the majority of publications in the field did not cite the research. Those who have argued in favor of using the research include Dr Robert Pozos from the University of Minnesota and Dr John Hayward from the University of Victoria. In a 1990 review of the Dachau experiments, Robert Berger concludes that the study has "all the ingredients of a scientific fraud" and that the data "cannot advance science or save human lives." In 1989, the United States Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) considered using data from Nazi research into the effects of phosgene gas, believing the data could help US soldiers stationed in the Persian Gulf at the time. They eventually decided against using it, on the grounds it would lead to criticism and similar data could be obtained from later studies on animals. Writing for Jewish Law, Baruch Cohen concluded that the EPA's "knee-jerk reaction" to reject the data's use was "typical, but unprofessional", arguing that it could have saved lives.Controversy has also risen from the use of results of biological warfare testing done by the Imperial Japanese Army's Unit 731.NEWS, Unit 731: Japan's biological force, BBC News,weblink 27 March 2008, 1 February 2002, The results from Unit 731 were kept classified by the United States until the majority of doctors involved were given pardons.BOOK, Reilly, Kevin, Stephen Kaufman, Angela Bodino, Racism: A Global Reader,weblink 27 March 2008, 2003, M.E. Sharpe, 0-7656-1059-0,